Insights from HSF’s private equity team

How does the HSF private equity team differentiate itself in the market?

John Taylor, partner and the head of the private equity practice in London: We have a multi-capability private equity practice, advising clients across the full lifecycle of investments from fundraising and capital deployment, supporting their investments all the way to exit. We work across all capital structures and execute extremely complex transactions and strategies in multiple jurisdictions. Our private capital team leverages our full-service offering and the multiple sector strengths within our wider firm.

Our team continues to grow strategically. In the past 12 months, our hires of Eleanor Shanks as head of international private equity in London, venture and growth capital partner Dylan Doran Kennett and leveraged finance partner Ambarish Dash have bolstered our private capital practice in London.

Dr Christoph Nawroth, partner, Düsseldorf: In Continental Europe, recent hires include private equity and venture capital partner Gregor Klenk in Frankfurt, as well as finance partners Dr Fritz Kleweta, Sergio Cires and Laure Bonin into our Frankfurt, Madrid and Paris offices respectively. The teams in continental Europe and London are fully integrated and offer our clients seamless advice wherever this is needed.

We’ve a strong client portfolio, advising the likes of EQT, Aquiline Capital Partners, H.I.G. Capital, GIC, and CPPIB on deals ranging across the likes of energy/renewables, infrastructure, TMT, life-sciences, and financial services.

Can you discuss some of the trends that are impacting your clients?

Joseph Dennis, partner, London (JD): In the UK, the recent stabilisation of interest rates has resulted in cautious optimism for sellers to begin work on exits that have been sitting patiently in the pipeline. As rates begin to ease, we expect to see the gap in pricing expectations beginning to close.

Christopher Theris, partner, Paris: In continental Europe, the sheer number of elections and similar political events has resulted in a cautious market. We’re also seeing the use of bilateral processes at the inception of deals, moving away from a more typical auction or auction/bilateral hybrid arrangement.

‘The City of London is arguably the top global financial centre and has a huge range of intrinsic advantages.’

JD: Our private equity team were first movers in identifying the trend towards funds specialising along sector lines. Some years ago, we positioned our private equity practice to be closely aligned with our top-tier sector focused M&A practices, along the same sector lines as our key sponsor clients and targets. We are now well positioned to advise multi-strategy and multi-geography sponsors active through their full investment lifecycle across each of the geographies in which we operate, and we and our clients are really benefiting from this approach.

What role do you see for continuation funds?

Jonathan Blake, head of international private funds strategy, London: Continuation funds are part of a broader growth trend in secondary opportunities. Although the global economy is showing positive signs of stability, achieving the exit multiples that GPs would expect for their high-performing assets is still uncertain in current market conditions.

Stephen Newby, partner, London: The structure of a continuation fund offers LPs an opportunity to either liquidate or continue to hold their position. It also offers an opportunity for secondaries investors to participate, often with one ‘anchor’ investor that underwrites the existing LPs that decide not to rollover.
These options give GPs a good alternative to a full exit, especially where the GP is confident in its ability to add further value to an asset that will help to achieve even greater returns over the medium term.

Michael Jacobs (MJ), partner, London:To compliment continuation funds, we are seeing more structured pre-exit syndication and introducing a wider pool of investors into later stage assets – in part to drive liquidity and partial exits, and also a consequence of the broader ‘private for longer’ theme. The ‘private IPO’ concept is part of this trend.

How is the industry reacting to the change in government and the new policies that affect private capital?

Eleanor Shanks, partner and head of international private equity in London: The private equity industry as a whole wants to play its part and will continue to make the case to governments of the sector’s significant contribution to the whole economy, including to growth and productivity. It is a significant driver of private investment in the UK as it is globally.

There are some specific tax policy proposals that were in Labour’s manifesto that the government are currently considering, and we all appreciate the complexity balancing the incentives and the country’s fiscal position – in driving that investment and growth which in turn drives receipts for the revenue.

MJ: The City of London is arguably the top global financial centre and has a huge range of intrinsic advantages – its competitiveness has been boosted in recent years with the Financial Services and Markets Act and the Edinburgh and Mansion House reforms, alongside the UK’s listing regime reboot. While it is hard for any individual policy decision to change this, we would caution the government to not take the City for granted.

Subject to unexpected circumstances, what might we expect for deal activity at the start of 2025?

David D’Souza, partner, London: The focus on Distribution to Paid-In Capital (DPI) means the UK pipeline continues to deepen. Reassuringly, it is also widening across sectors which may have been slower in the last few years.

Alberto Frasquet, regional head of corporate EMEA, Madrid: In Continental Europe, private equity funds are likely to continue to look at assets in the pharmaceutical/healthcare, infrastructure and energy (particularly data centres), education and software sectors – these appear to be the most attractive for investment.

For more information, please contact:

Herbert Smith Freehills
Exchange House
12 Primrose Street
London
EC2A 2EG

T: 020 7374 8000

www.herbertsmithfreehills.com

‘More uncertainty than any other recent election’ – US partners on what the Trump-Harris race means for Big Law

The comparison between City partners’ attitudes to the UK general election in July and US partners’ attitudes to next Tuesday’s elections could not be starker. Then, not one partner interviewed doubted that Labour would emerge the winner. Now, it’s a coinflip – with even more uncertainty around what either candidate would do in office.

LB checked in with partners at leading US firms to learn how lawyers and clients are navigating this uncertainty.

Continue reading “‘More uncertainty than any other recent election’ – US partners on what the Trump-Harris race means for Big Law”

‘I never saw this as impossible’ – Mishcons’ Shaistah Akhtar on the case that won her Commercial Litigation Team of the Year

Mishcon de Reya‘s hard-fought victory for Nigeria in Nigeria v P&ID saw the firm take home Commercial Team of the Year at the Legal Business Awards in September. The team assisted Nigeria in challenging a $6.6bn arbitral award made in favour of BVI-incorporated shell company Process & Industrial Developments Limited (P&ID) in 2017. With interest accruing at $1m a day, the team sought to overturn the award on the basis of fraud.

But, when the firm was instructed in 2019, Nigeria was almost three years past the deadline to bring the set-aside challenge. Before the team could even begin to present its fraud case (the result of a massive global investigation effort), it had to fight to extend the deadline – and achieved an unprecedented extension, granted in July 2020.

The team’s hard work paid off. On 23 October 2023, judgment was handed down in Nigeria’s favour by Mr Justice Knowles. It was found that P&ID had obtained the award, now worth over $11bn, by fraud.

Shaistah Akhtar, partner in Mishcons’ dispute resolution group, spoke to LB about getting the call from Nigeria, the biggest hurdles the team overcame, and the pressures of a case with national and international repercussions.

Continue reading “‘I never saw this as impossible’ – Mishcons’ Shaistah Akhtar on the case that won her Commercial Litigation Team of the Year”

Bryan Cave Leighton Paisner: The Client’s View


Bryan Cave Leighton Paisner


Lawyers and
Team Quality

81.93


Quality of partners 84.52


Quality of associates 74.14


Partner availability and engagement 83.99


All scores are global and /100.

What do clients really think about the service they receive from law firms? At Legal 500, we hear from hundreds of thousands of clients every year, rating firms on key metrics such as lawyer quality and availability, billing, and levels of communication and expertise.

The answers we receive allow us to evaluate firms using a set of client service data scores, covering Lawyers and Team Quality, Value: Billing and Efficiency, and Sector and Industry Knowledge – all of which combine to produce an overall Client Service Score.

This article focuses on Lawyers and Team Quality, for which Bryan Cave Leighton Paisner scores 81.93. (The rest of this article is available to logged-in users onlyIf you are unable to log in above right, please click ‘Forgot your password?’ below to gain access to the full article). Continue reading “Bryan Cave Leighton Paisner: The Client’s View”

Latham & Watkins: The Client’s View


Latham & Watkins


Lawyers and
Team Quality

85.21


Quality of partners 88.73


Quality of associates 81.14


Partner availability and engagement 86.01


All scores are global and /100.

What do clients really think about the service they receive from law firms? At Legal 500, we hear from hundreds of thousands of clients every year, rating firms on key metrics such as lawyer quality and availability, billing, and levels of communication and expertise.

The answers we receive allow us to evaluate firms using a set of client service data scores, covering Lawyers and Team Quality, Value: Billing and Efficiency, and Sector and Industry Knowledge – all of which combine to produce an overall Client Service Score.

This article focuses on Lawyers and Team Quality, for which Latham & Watkins scores 85.21. (The rest of this article is available to logged-in users onlyIf you are unable to log in above right, please click ‘Forgot your password?’ below to gain access to the full article). Continue reading “Latham & Watkins: The Client’s View”

Hogan Lovells: The Client’s View


Hogan Lovells


Lawyers and
Team Quality

81.20


Quality of partners 84.08


Quality of associates 76.19


Partner availability and engagement 83.46


All scores are global and /100.

What do clients really think about the service they receive from law firms? At Legal 500, we hear from hundreds of thousands of clients every year, rating firms on key metrics such as lawyer quality and availability, billing, and levels of communication and expertise.

The answers we receive allow us to evaluate firms using a set of client service data scores, covering Lawyers and Team Quality, Value: Billing and Efficiency, and Sector and Industry Knowledge – all of which combine to produce an overall Client Service Score.

This article focuses on Lawyers and Team Quality, for which Hogan Lovells scores 81.20. (The rest of this article is available to logged-in users onlyIf you are unable to log in above right, please click ‘Forgot your password?’ below to gain access to the full article). Continue reading “Hogan Lovells: The Client’s View”

Ashurst: The Client’s View


Ashurst


Lawyers and
Team Quality

79.59


Quality of partners 83.47


Quality of associates 75.76


Partner availability and engagement 83.18


All scores are global and /100.

What do clients really think about the service they receive from law firms? At Legal 500, we hear from hundreds of thousands of clients every year, rating firms on key metrics such as lawyer quality and availability, billing, and levels of communication and expertise.

The answers we receive allow us to evaluate firms using a set of client service data scores, covering Lawyers and Team Quality, Value: Billing and Efficiency, and Sector and Industry Knowledge – all of which combine to produce an overall Client Service Score.

This article focuses on Lawyers and Team Quality, for which Ashurst scores 79.59. (The rest of this article is available to logged-in users onlyIf you are unable to log in above right, please click ‘Forgot your password?’ below to gain access to the full article). Continue reading “Ashurst: The Client’s View”

Herbert Smith Freehills: The Client’s View


Herbert Smith Freehills


Lawyers and
Team Quality

82.30


Quality of partners 85.21


Quality of associates 78.16


Partner availability and engagement 83.46


All scores are global and /100.

What do clients really think about the service they receive from law firms? At Legal 500, we hear from hundreds of thousands of clients every year, rating firms on key metrics such as lawyer quality and availability, billing, and levels of communication and expertise.

The answers we receive allow us to evaluate firms using a set of client service data scores, covering Lawyers and Team Quality, Value: Billing and Efficiency, and Sector and Industry Knowledge – all of which combine to produce an overall Client Service Score.

This article focuses on Lawyers and Team Quality, for which Herbert Smith Freehills scores 82.30. (The rest of this article is available to logged-in users onlyIf you are unable to log in above right, please click ‘Forgot your password?’ below to gain access to the full article). Continue reading “Herbert Smith Freehills: The Client’s View”

Glasses half full

Geoff Moore, managing partner of Ireland’s Arthur Cox, is looking at life with his glass very much half full, and he is not alone. ‘Notwithstanding the awfulness going on around the world – two full-blown wars, geopolitical tensions, election uncertainty, and more – the underlying domestic economy in Ireland is actually performing very strongly,’ says Moore. ‘Things have remained robust.’

Continue reading “Glasses half full”

Vodafone UK head of legal Karen Thorpe on winning LB’s In-House Team of the Year and Vodafone’s ‘once in a lifetime’ merger with Three

With work including the proposed merger of Vodafone and Three’s UK businesses – a deal that would create the largest mobile operator in the UK; the successful defence of the £1bn Phones 4u litigation – the culmination of a decade’s worth of work for Vodafone’s legal team; and the launch of a major in-house transformation project, it’s fair to say that Vodafone’s lawyers have been keeping themselves busy.

 Legal Business caught up with Vodafone UK’s head of legal, Karen Thorpe (pictured, sixth from left), to discuss an award-winning year.  

Continue reading “Vodafone UK head of legal Karen Thorpe on winning LB’s In-House Team of the Year and Vodafone’s ‘once in a lifetime’ merger with Three”

‘A true win’ – Baker McKenzie on record Ecuador $1.6bn debt-for-nature swap and winning Finance Team of the Year

Baker McKenzie won Finance Team of the Year at the Legal Business Awards for representing project manager Oceans Finance Company in structuring and implementing the government of Ecuador’s $1.6bn debt-for-nature swap and providing $300m for the Galápagos Islands – the largest marine conservation debt conversion to date.

LB spoke with partners Matthew Cox and James Tanner (pictured, middle) to learn more about their experience working on this landmark deal, the challenges they encountered, and what it meant to win Finance Team of the Year.

Continue reading “‘A true win’ – Baker McKenzie on record Ecuador $1.6bn debt-for-nature swap and winning Finance Team of the Year”

‘Deals like this act as a catalyst’ – Gowling WLG on its Legal Business Award-winning work for AstraZeneca

coronavirus cells under the microscope

Gowling WLG won this year’s LB Award for Life Sciences Team of the Year for its role in advising AstraZeneca on a collaboration and license agreement with biopharmaceutical company Quell Therapeutics worth more than £2bn. LB spoke with two of the partners who worked on the deal to discuss why it’s important and what it means for the team. 

Continue reading “‘Deals like this act as a catalyst’ – Gowling WLG on its Legal Business Award-winning work for AstraZeneca”

‘What sort of profession do we want to have?’ – young Black lawyers on diversity, inclusion, and what needs to be done

‘There’s lawyers all over the world. The question isn’t whether or not Black people can be lawyers. The question is, what is it about England and Wales that means that Black lawyers don’t get the same opportunities as their white counterparts? And there’s no way to explain that other than racism.’

This comment from one City associate frankly states the issue. ‘When we talk about DEI’, they continue, ‘it’s often a very polite, corporate way of saying “Don’t be racist.”’ Law firms are, perhaps understandably, reluctant to use words like racism in their communications. But failure to acknowledge the problem makes it all the harder to resolve.

Continue reading “‘What sort of profession do we want to have?’ – young Black lawyers on diversity, inclusion, and what needs to be done”